Abstract:
The Interjections of Modern English are a unique part of everyday speech, firstly, because of their little-studied
nature and secondly, due to their rather interesting features, which altogether makes this topic actual for
research. The purpose of the inquiry is to determine the most appropriate views of this specific part of speech;
provide an overview of current relevant theories, including various classifications and distinctive features of
their usage; set own original view on the concept and role of interjections and finally, elicit the functions
interjections perform in the Modern English language. To investigate the central phenomena, the research
utilized a qualitative method with some minor elements of a quantitative design. The paper presents two parts.
The first is a theoretical one, which summarizes the most popular opinions of Western and some Russian
linguists regarding the concept of interjection. The second part is a practical one, which distinguishes the
functions of interjections in the Modern English through the analysis of the book of J. K. Rowling “Harry Potter
and the Philosopher’s Stone” (1997) based on the semantic classification of Ameka (1992), presented in the
theoretical part. Thanks to the both theoretical and practical approaches, a sufficient number of functions
revealed: communicative, imperative, expressive and many others. The received data might be used by
instructors for students majoring in Applied Linguistics and Translation Studies. Based on these findings the
original functional dictionary of Modern English Interjections might be also developed. The draft version
fragment of such an innovative dictionary is presented in the appendix